Santiago, Carlos M. v. United States

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 18, 2000
Docket99-3909
StatusPublished

This text of Santiago, Carlos M. v. United States (Santiago, Carlos M. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santiago, Carlos M. v. United States, (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

Nos. 99-3909, 99-3910

United States of America,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Josue Santiago,

Defendant,

Appeals of: Carlos M. Santiago and Carlos E. Santiago,

Claimants-Appellants.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 96-CR-70--Thomas J. Curran, Judge.

Argued June 2, 2000--Decided September 18, 2000

Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Evans and Williams, Circuit Judges.

Williams, Circuit Judge. Carlos E. Santiago and Carlos M. Santiago seek the return of funds forfeited to the government following family- member Josue Santiago’s conviction on charges of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. They contend that certain funds included in the district court’s forfeiture order belong to them and are not the proceeds of illegal activities. With limited exceptions, the district court rejected the Santiagos’ claims. We affirm.

I

On July 9, 1996, a federal grand jury returned a ten-count superseding indictment against Josue Santiago and his father, Carlos E. Santiago./1 The indictment charged Josue with conspiracy to distribute cocaine and possession with the intent to distribute cocaine, and charged Josue and his father with laundering the proceeds of cocaine trafficking and conspiracy to commit that crime. The indictment also sought the forfeiture of the proceeds of the defendants’ drug-related activities and all property used to facilitate those activities. In particular, the indictment identified approximately $530,000 held in thirteen separate bank accounts in the names of various Santiago family members including Josue, Carlos E., and Josue’s brother, Carlos M.

Eventually, Josue agreed to plead guilty to conspiring to distribute cocaine in exchange for the dismissal of the remaining charges against him and the dismissal of all the charges against his father. Josue also agreed to "forfeit any right, title and interest in the property described in the forfeiture provision of the indictment." The district court accepted Josue’s plea and sentenced him to 92 months’ imprisonment.

After sentencing, and on the government’s motion, the district court entered an order forfeiting to the government Josue’s right to the property identified in the indictment. Then, pursuant to 21 U.S.C. sec. 853(n)(1), the government published notice of its intent to dispose of the forfeited property. In response, Carlos E. and Carlos M. filed a joint motion for return of property, asserting that the funds in the thirteen bank accounts included in the forfeiture order belong to one or the other of them and are not the proceeds of illegal activities.

In January 1998, the district court held a series of hearings on the Santiagos’ motion. Jeffery Doss, an investigator with the Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, District Attorney’s Office testified about the evidence that led law enforcement officials to suspect that the funds in the various bank accounts at issue were the proceeds of Josue’s illegal drug trafficking activities and were simply being held in Carlos E.’s and Carlos M.’s names to conceal and protect the funds. He testified that officers searching Josue’s residence at the time of Josue’s arrest discovered numerous financial documents, many of which were addressed to the residence Carlos E. and Carlos M. shared, not Josue’s residence. Doss also noted that a subsequent search of Carlos E.’s residence uncovered documents relating to the accounts at issue in this case, including a notebook in which Carlos E. kept track of his finances and envelopes and bank statements from a Puerto Rican bank.

Doss further testified that two confidential informants provided information regarding Josue’s financial dealings. One informant told police that Josue told him that he did not keep bank accounts or property in his name, but rather kept his assets in the names of relatives and girlfriends. This same informant also told police that Josue told him that he had money in Puerto Rican bank accounts. The other confidential informant told police that Josue had several hundred thousand dollars at a pair of area banks in his father’s name and in his brother’s or sister’s name. The information provided by these confidential informants was later confirmed by the existence of accounts at the banks identified, in the names of Carlos E., Carlos M., and Neida Collazo (Josue’s sister). Investigation of these accounts eventually led police to the rest of the accounts the government seeks to have forfeited, all of which were in the names of various Santiago family members.

Doss finally testified that while investigating Josue’s illegal activities in Milwaukee, the police learned that Josue had a prior arrest for a drug-related offense in California. Police investigating that crime had discovered several bank accounts in the names of Josue, Carlos E., and Carlos (no middle initial) Santiago, which Josue admitted held the proceeds of his crimes. Police also discovered that someone identifying himself as Carlos Santiago attempted to close these accounts shortly after Josue’s arrest.

The government also elicited testimony from, and submitted exhibits prepared by, Jeff Mesarich, an Auditor with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, who had conducted an analysis of the accounts at issue and had examined the Santiagos’ financial circumstances. With respect to each account at issue, Mesarich described the history of the account, including the names on the account, the likely sources of deposits, and other evidence relating to the account. For instance, he explained how the money in many accounts moved through a tortured history of successive accounts and the name or names on certain accounts changed several times. In addition, he pointed to documentary evidence establishing that Carlos E. himself recognized that several of the accounts in his name contained Josue’s funds.

Mesarich further testified about the income Carlos E. and Carlos M. declared on their tax returns over the years prior to Josue’s arrest. Before his retirement in the early 1980s, Carlos E.’s reported wages ranged between approximately $8,600 and $22,800. After his retirement, Carlos E.’s reported pension and retirement income varied between approximately $12,200 and $18,300 (with the exception of one year in which his income was approximately $3,000). Carlos E. also enjoyed substantial interest income beginning in the early to mid-1980s (when Josue purportedly began his illegal activities), which at one point exceeded $27,000 dollars. The evidence regarding Carlos M.’s reported income is restricted to the 1990s, but reveals that his combined income from wages and unemployment benefits ranged between approximately $8,600 and $13,200 and that he reported virtually no interest income.

Carlos E. and Carlos M. also testified in support of their motion, offering details regarding their income. Carlos E. testified that both he and his wife (before her 1991 death) had been wage-earners most their lives, that they received income from certain rental properties, that one rental property was sold for $20,000 in the late 1970s, and that he had inherited $10,000 from his father. Carlos M. testified that he had worked nearly thirty years at three successive jobs, earning between five and eight dollars per hour. Neither Carlos E. nor Carlos M., however, offered any documentary support for their assertions regarding their income or otherwise accounting for how they accumulated so much money. Both simply asserted that the money in the accounts they claim derived from income they saved over the years.

In cross-examining the Santiagos, the government elicited testimony regarding the Santiagos’ expenses. Carlos E.

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